…while we wait for the blessed hope – the glorious appearing of our great God and Savior, Jesus Christ,… – Titus 2:13

French retirement protests take violent turn

Violence and unrest throughout the world, especially in Europe. Is this the road we are on? Jesus said the end times would be just like the day of Noah, which was filled with violence to the point that God wanted to end it and start over…

Good videos and pictures in three articles below, follow original links…

PARIS – Masked youths clashed with police and set fires in cities across France on Tuesday as protests against a proposed hike in the retirement age took an increasingly radical turn. Hundreds of flights were canceled, long lines formed at gas stations and train service in many regions was cut in half.

President Nicolas Sarkozy pledged to crack down on “troublemakers” and guarantee public order, raising the possibility of more confrontations with young rioters after a week of disruptive but largely nonviolent demonstrations.

Sarkozy also vowed to ensure that fuel was available to everyone. Some 4,000 gas stations were out of gas Tuesday afternoon, the environment minister said. The prime minister said oil companies agreed to pool gasoline stocks to try to get the dry gas stations filled again.

Prime Minister Francois Fillon said, “The government will continue to dislodge protesters blocking the fuel depots. … No one has the right to take hostage an entire country, its economy and its jobs.”

The protesters are trying to prevent the French parliament from approving a bill that would raise the retirement age from 60 to 62 to help prevent the pension system from going bankrupt. Many workers feel the change would be a dangerous step in eroding France’s social benefits — which include long vacations, contracts that make it hard for employers to lay off workers and a state-subsidized health care system — in favor of “American-style capitalism.”

Sarkozy’s conservative government points out that 62 is among the lowest retirement ages in the world, the French are living much longer than they used to and the pension system is losing money. The workers say the government could find pension savings elsewhere, such as by raising contributions from employers.

In Paris, huge crowds marched toward the gilded-domed Invalides, where Napoleon is buried. Police estimated the crowd at 60,000, down from 65,000 at a similar march last week. Riot police wielding plastic shields surrounded the massive Place des Invalides.

“It’s important to come out because France wouldn’t be what it is today if the generations that came before us hadn’t taken to the streets,” said Lidwine Mure, a 32-year-old teacher who has attended all six Paris protests since September. Her dark clothes were a collage of pro-strike stickers.

At a high school in the Paris suburb of Nanterre, a few hundred youths started throwing stones from a bridge at nearly as many police, who responded with tear gas and barricaded the area. Youths also knocked an Associated Press photographer off his motorbike and kicked and punched him as they rampaged down a street adjacent to the school. Another AP photographer was hit in the face by an empty glass bottle in Lyon, where rioters smashed several store windows.

The violence recalled student protests in 2006 that forced the government to abandon a law making it easier for employers to hire and fire young people. Those protests started peacefully but degenerated into violence, with troublemakers smashing store windows and setting cars and garbage cans ablaze.

The specter of 2005 riots that spread through poor housing projects nationwide with large, disenfranchised immigrant populations was also present.

At the Place de la Republique in eastern Paris on Tuesday, young people pelted riot police with projectiles, while youth in the central city of Lyon torched garbage cans and cars as police riposted with clouds of tear gas.

Sarkozy called the reform his “duty” as head of state. The protests in France come as countries across Europe are cutting spending and raising taxes to bring down record deficits and debts from the worst recession in 70 years.

Up to half of flights Tuesday out of Paris’ Orly airport were scrapped, and 30 percent of flights out of other French airports, including the country’s largest, Charles de Gaulle, serving Paris, were canceled, the DGAC civil aviation authority said.

Most cancellations were on short- and medium-haul domestic and inter-European flights. The walkout by air traffic controllers was expected to last one day, with flights expected to return to normal on Wednesday.

At the airport in the Atlantic city of Bordeaux, scores of protesters blocked the entrance for several hours Tuesday morning.

Strikes by oil refinery workers have sparked fuel shortages that forced at least 1,000 gas stations to be shuttered. Other stations saw large crowds. At an Esso station on the southeast edge of Paris on Tuesday morning, the line snaked along a city block and some drivers stood with canisters to stock gasoline in case of shortages.

“There are people who want to work, the immense majority, and they cannot be deprived of gasoline,” Sarkozy said.

Police in the northwestern town of Grand-Quevilly intervened Tuesday to dislodge protesters blocking a fuel depot, which had been completely sealed off since Monday morning, local officials there said. No one was hurt in the operation, the officials said.

Students entered the fray last week, blockading high schools around the country and staging protests.

Across the country, 379 high schools were blocked or disrupted Tuesday to varying degrees, the Education Ministry said. It was the highest figure so far in the student movement against the retirement reform. Student movements have forced previous governments to back off planned reforms in the past, and student leaders hope these protests will prove as successful.

The head of the UNEF student union, Jean-Baptiste Prevost, said the students “have no other solution but to continue.”

“Every time the government is firm, there are more people in the street,” he told i-tele news channel.

With disruptions on the national railway entering their eighth consecutive day Tuesday, many commuters’ patience was beginning to wear thin. Only about one in two trains were running on some of the Paris Metro lines, and commuters had to elbow their way onto packed trains.

The SNCF railway operator said only about half the regularly scheduled high-speed TGV trains linking Paris to regional French cities were operating Tuesday, while fast trains between regions were slashed by 75 percent. The Eurostar, which links Paris to London via the British Channel tunnel, is unaffected.

In the Mediterranean port city of Marseille, strikes by garbage collectors have left heaps of trash piled along city sidewalks. But still, the piles of rotting garbage don’t appear to have diminished labor union support in a city that has long had an activist reputation.

“Transport, the rubbish, the nurses, the teachers, the workers, the white collar, everyone who works, we should all be united. If there is no transport today, we’re not all going to die from it,” said 55-year-old resident Francoise Michelle.

The pension measure is expected to pass a vote in the Senate this week.

Student leaders have called for a demonstration in front of the Senate on Wednesday and another round of strikes at high schools and universities on Thursday.

France faces a sixth day of nationwide protests and continued strikes against President Nicolas Sarkozy’s unpopular pension reform as the government taps on emergency reserves to offset a growing fuel shortage.

The interior ministry said 480,000 protestors had poured onto the streets by midday, slightly down on the 500,000 at the last weekday protest, as youths battled police, petrol stations ran dry and flights were cancelled.

Union estimates for turnout, frequently three times higher than those of police, were not immediately available.

With over 200 protests planned for Tuesday’s day of action, the sixth since September, and all 12 French oil refineries shut down by strikes, Sarkozy said the cabinet would draw up a plan to stop France grinding to a standstill.

“In a democracy, everyone can express themselves but you have to do so without violence or excesses,” Sarkozy told journalists in the French resort of Deauville following a summit with Russian and German leaders.

“I will hold a meeting as soon as I return to Paris to unblock a certain number of situations, because there are people who want to work and who must not be deprived of petrol.”

Production at French oil refineries has been shut down since last week and fuel shortages have hit more than 2,600 petrol stations, or around one in five nationwide, according to an AFP tally of oil industry figures.

French fuel and heating federation FF3C said the “extremely worrying” situation “should definitely be called a shortage,” while the International Energy Agency said France has “sufficient stocks” to deal with the situation.

French Socialist Party leader Martine Aubry speaks out about the protests against pension reform.

Authorities in Normandy requisitioned 12 petrol stations for use by rescue and emergency services, while Prime Minister Francois Fillon said a third of departments or local administrations were experiencing fuel shortages.

Fillon said that the government’s fuel resupply programme would see the situation restored to normal in four or five days’ time.

The head of the national road haulage association, Jean-Paul Deneuville, told AFP that “the end of the week is going to be very difficult” with many transport companies unable to work because of the fuel shortages.

The interior minister promised tough action as clashes erupted anew outside a secondary school in Nanterre, near Paris, where youths burned a car and threw rocks at riot police for the second day in a row.

Police fired tear gas and arrested nine youth protestors in the central city of Lyon who had overturned cars and set one alight.

The ministry said that 1,158 troublemakers had been arrested at demonstrations since the start of the week, 163 of them on Tuesday morning.

Truckers staged go-slows on motorways near Paris and several provincial cities, while drivers blocked access to goods supply depots and joined oil workers blocking fuel depots to defend their right to retire at 60.

The powerful CGT union’s transport section called for their strike action to be renewed on Wednesday, encompassing airport staff, air traffic controllers, public transport workers and employees of national railways operator SNCF.

Former Socialist prime minister Laurent Fabius appealed to Sarkozy to open dialogue with the unions, warning of possible “excesses.”

Half of flights from Paris Orly airport were to be cancelled on Tuesday, and around one in three at the main Roissy-Charles de Gaulle and regional airports.

Slightly over half of express TGV trains were to run, while the Eurostar line under the Channel to London was expected to operate normally and nine out of 10 high-speed Thalys connections were to run to Belgium.

As well as train workers and truck drivers, postal workers, telephone employees, teachers and sections of the media are also on strike.

Unions want to force Sarkozy to abandon a bill to raise the minimum retirement age to 62, which is in the final days of its journey through a parliament in which the right-wing leader enjoys a comfortable majority.

Most French back the current protests, with a poll published Monday in the popular Le Parisien daily showing that 71 percent of those asked expressed either support or sympathy for the movement.

Thousands of demonstrators rallied in London on Tuesday against harsh austerity measures being unveiled by the government this week in a bid to pay off a huge deficit.

Union members and protesters waved placards saying “Don’t Break Britain” and “No more cuts” a day before Prime Minister David Cameron’s Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition is to reveal details of the spending review.

“At worst the cuts will plunge us back into recession, and at best they will condemn us to lost years of high unemployment and growth so weak that the deficit may well stay high,” said Brendan Barber, general secretary of the Trades Union Congress (TUC).

“We’re worried about our jobs and about the vulnerable people we work with. I work a lot with the elderly and the cuts will mean more of them dying alone,” Margaret Thomas, a health worker with the council in Anglesey, Wales, told AFP.

“The people in Whitehall need to come down to the ground and see what it’s like for people like us,” she said.

Billy McColl, a freelance actor, said he had come to protest about cuts to arts funding.

“The theatre industry alone brings in more than a billion pounds each year, but we can’t do that without some public subsidy,” he said.

The recently elected leader of the centre-left opposition Labour party, Ed Miliband, was not taking part in the demonstration despite promising about a month ago that he would join in.

The coalition says that Britain’s Â£154.7 billion deficit is a legacy of the previous Labour government, but the opposition and some economists have warned the cuts could plunge the country back into recession.

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God’s Word:

"For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God--not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God's workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do." -- Ephesians 2:8-10